Center for Biofilm Engineering
Thesis Abstract:
"Pathogen Transport and Capture in a Porous Media Biofilm Reactor"
Drinking water distribution systems pose the potential to
transport biological and chemical contaminants to the consumers’ tap that
can be responsible for widespread waterborne disease outbreaks (WBDO). A
need exists to improve the ability to monitor contaminants that can attach
to the distribution system’s interior surfaces and to obtain samples for
diagnosing both the cause of a WBDO and the extent of contamination within
the system. In this study, a porous media reactor colonized with a
mixed-species drinking water biofilm was used to study the capture of
Salmonella typhimurium as a model pathogen. Parallel reactors were
operated under constant flow (CF) and constant head (CH) to compare
flow-regime induced spatial variations in biofilm accumulation and the
resulting pathogen capture. Parallel test reactors were operated with 0.5
mg/L supplemental carbon until the accumulation of biofilm in the CH reactor
reduced the flowrate to the target sampling point (CF flowrate). Both test
reactors were then inoculated with slug doses of approximately 3x109
CFU S. typhimurium. Effluent water
samples were collected for five pore-volumes, followed by
the destructive sampling of the reactor. Plate counts were used to enumerate
S. typhimurium present in effluent samples and captured within the
reactor. Cell counts in effluent samples displayed an accelerated
breakthrough compared with a non-reactive tracer. Compared with uncolonized
control reactors (0.13%), colonized reactors (0.96%) captured significantly
more cells. Despite spatial variations in biofilm accumulation, colonized CH
and CF reactors captured comparable amounts of S. typhimurium.
Increasing sampling duration to twenty pore volumes demonstrated greater
retention of captured cells in the colonized reactors over the control
reactors. S. typhimurium transport and capture was also observed in a
0.9 mm square flowcell packed with 100 mm beads using a confocal microscope.
Interception and straining were responsible for capture on clean beads while
biofilm accumulation narrowed pore throats sufficiently to allow for
mechanical filtration to occur. This study demonstrates that using biofilm
colonized porous media may be an effective tool to capture pathogens for
monitoring drinking water distribution systems.
Pathogen Transport and Capture in a Porous Media
Biofilm Reactor, Thesis Defense by Kevin Grabinski, M.S. Candidate in
Environmental Engineering, Montana State University, July 2007.
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